They happened in the following order: * Sugar Act (4/5/1764), * Stamp Act (2/17/1765), * Quartering Act (3/24/1765), * Townshend Act (6/29/1767), * Tea Act (5/10/1773), * Intolerable Acts (Series of Acts in 1774).
(11) Second Continental Congress
(9) Boston Tea Party
(7) Boston Massacre
(13) Declaration of Independence
in chronilogical order
After the Intolerable Acts, which consisted of the Tea Act, the Stamp Act, and the Quartering Act, the Boston Tea party happened. Then, the American Revolutionary War began.
i think prohibitory act doesnt belong.
the quartering act
The Stamp Act, passed in 1765, was not one of the Intolerable Acts.
The colonies banded together to revolt against Britain as a result of the Townshend Acts. Charles Townshend created the Townshend Acts.
The 4 intolerable acts were the Stamp Act, Quartering Act, Townshend act, and the Tea Act.
The Parliament act of 1911 is part of the constitution of the United Kindom. This act has to do with limiting the power of the House of Lords. It limits their power to veto.
In no specific order Quartering Coercive Declaratory Tea Sugar Townshend Stamp Quartering
The Townshend Acts succeeded the Stamp Act and was passed by the British Parliament in 1767.
Stamp act, Sugar act, Intolerable act, Quartering act, Tea act, and Townshend Revenue act. It might be more but the first two are the main ones
The Acts imposed on the Colonists were the Sugar Act, Quartering Act, and Stamp Act.
the british acts were: navagation acts the proclimation of 1763 sugar act(1764) quartering act(1765) stamp act(1765) townshend acts(1767) tea act(1773) intolerable acts(1774)
The Stamp Act, the Quartering Act, and the Townshend Acts.
how did Rebbecca franks contributed to the stamp act/sugar act/quartering act/townshend act?
because ....................... I DONT KNOW
They made the intolerable acts to oppose the british taxes, they Used the Quartering Act, Stamp Act.
The colonists were angered at the Stamp Act, which imposed taxes on paper goods. They were also angry about the Quartering Act, which required them to provide lodging in their homes for British soldiers.